I am currently getting my packet together, and doing all the tests required for me to go to selection. I know there are a lot of members in the Army here, and I can only assume a few have been to selection or may even be operators.

I've been training my ass off, reading any literature I can find, soon to be working on my land nav with a pilot in my unit, and rucking when my company allows me to leave early to prep. The only first hand person I can talk to is the recruiter I am going through on post, but he is usually pretty busy and it never hurts to speak to as many people as possible to get as many angles / points of view as you can.

I'm not looking for a way to cheat my way through by learning their scoring system or what events are currently being done in what order at selection. Just any advice anyone could give me, be it first hand or second hand through a buddy who went through.

I am looking to go sometime in April, but I can't select a date until I am done with the DLAB (thursday 12JAN), TABE (18JAN), and my physical (part 1 tomorrow). Plus, I need an updated PT test.

i went to SFAS in FEB 07, so its not the same now as it was when i went. they have a whole new system of scoring events im not really sure how it works so i wont even try and guess. but dont over train, you dont wanna hurt yourself before you even get there. before i went i rucked every Saturday. and did PT 3 days a week on my own. all i did was a run one day. then pushup,s pull ups, and sit ups another day. and the 3rd day id give my self a PT test. i trained for about 2 months before i went. and everything worked out fine. but getting hurt is a big thing so thats the number one thing i can think of. don't over train. i think they gave us quick land nav class but i might be confusing that with SUT not sure. so know land nav before you go just in case. april should be a good time to go. shouldent be to hot yet. but alright man good luck. if you got any other questions i can try and answer them. but like i said SFAS and the Q have changed since ive been there.

Yeah, I'm definitely not trying to overdo it. Looking to probably take two weeks of leave pretty close to the time I leave so I can have one week of working out hard, and another week of easy workouts to rest my body before I go. As far as I have been told they do a quick class on land nav during in processing, and I'm about to be doing PT in the mornings with the other candidates instead of my company. Hoping they go over it during that time as well (0600 - 0800 PT w SF recruiter).

I feel really confident in myself, mentally, physically and emotionally. I'm trying to not be too over confident but anytime I talk about it, I put it in the manner that I will be selected and push all doubts of failure from my mind. Never wanted to achieve anything else as much as this. Now that my wife is fully supportive I know the only thing to stop me would be my quitting. Or shitting the bed on the DLAB tomorrow! That damn thing is kind of freaking me out now that it is right upon me.

How did the DLAB go man? I have been thinking about taking the leap and trying SFAS as well. It'll be after this next deployment before I have the chance though. I have 2 buddies who went through and were selected. They stressed that the biggest thing to get through your head is not focusing on what is coming next but the task at hand. Also that you are ALWAYS been assessed, there's always someone watching.

Go to www.professionalsoldiers.com and surf the info. There's a lot of good stuff there. Just tread lightly and read the sticky's before posting. They don't have a lot of patience there and most questions have been answered so a search can turn up info. Good luck brother!

I've been in a SF unit for ~12 years but I am on the support side. I have seen a lot of guys come and go so make sure it is really what you want to do. A lot of the aspects of the job is sexy but a lot of it is not. Talk to as many operators as you can before you take that big step.

I ended up getting a 116 on the DLAB. I think the fact that it is a test you can't study for and have no way of anticipating what you're going to encounter really stressed me the most. Not to mention how clueless I was as to how well I did during and after the test. Pretty nerve racking not knowing how to assess how well you are or are not doing, but I can assume that is how SFAS is going to be as well. I'm pretty happy with the score though, qualifies me for all languages.

I'll definitely be going to the website mentioned. Being at Ft Riley there is pretty much no one for me to talk to about the daily job cycle of being in an ODA. All I have left is one final piece of my physical, and the TABE test this coming week, but that one isn't a deal breaker as far as I know.

Thanks for leading me to that site. A wealth of knowledge on there in regards to preparing myself. Not to mention all the history and personal experiences of those who have served in SF since the 60s and onward. I have a date set now, and just keeping myself focused on the goal that lies ahead.

I went to SFAS back in 09'. All I can say is ruck...ruck untill you can't ruck anymore than add 10 more lbs and charlie mike! I never made it(broken ankle) then i deployed now I'm medically retiring(TBI and such from afghanistan) but givin the chance if i was well enough I sure as hell would go back and try again

Ranger that. I've been rucking every Saturday. Starting with smaller distances (4 - 5 miles) and focusing on keeping a 13 min/mile pace. My ruck is already about 40 - 50 pounds and all the SF guys have told me not to train any heavier and risk injury. I figured starting with a heavy weight and slowly adding more time / distance while maintaining a pace would work best for me. Get me used to keeping that pace in all sorts of different landscapes. I wish I had a big area to ruck with sand around here though. I hear there is a shitload of sand at McKall.

Hope everything goes well with your retirement. TBI is one of the biggest issues we face with injuries now; aside from hemorrhaging from limbs.

Check out www.rosstraining.com. I was an 18X and went through winter selection back in 03. Became an 18C and got to my team in Oct 04. I'd recommend what others have said, just do enough to stay in shape. Keep your feet hard, if there is one thing I'd recommend is rough them up as much as possible. That's the killer, the blisters and foot pain. Just remember, if the guy to the left and right of you hasn't quit, why should you? If they do, keep going and find someone else. Anyone can do it, it's all mental.

Still have a year and a half or so in the course. Won't find out for sure what group for a good while. A lot of the Russian speakers have been going to 3rd and 5th group lately. I hope that changes by the time I graduate though. Really wanna go to 10th.

Not for sure when I am going to SUT. There is a bottle neck in SOCM right now and we're hearing some of us may be getting admin rolled. If that doesn't happen then it should be around Nov - Dec time frame for SUT.

make sure all your packs are weighed correctly, i had a good friend go and he took something like a radio or locator out of his bag on the last march so he crossed 2lbs light and they failed him. kind of embarrassing.